Dozens of ZAKA volunteers participated in two days of rescue drills together with the IDF Home Front Command rescue unit, N12 reports. The training was held in a compound where a missile struck central Israel, transformed into a training ground simulating destruction and collapse scenarios.
Dozens of ZAKA volunteers completed two days of rescue training alongside the IDF Home Front Command's rescue unit, according to N12. The exercise was conducted at a compound where a missile struck central Israel, repurposed into a simulated collapse zone for realistic training scenarios.
The drill focused on extrication from damaged structures, debris management, and coordination between civilian volunteer teams and military rescue forces. No specific missile-strike location or date for the original impact was detailed in the report.
As The Zioneer previously covered, civilian rescue preparedness exercises occur against a backdrop of heightened security threats and natural-disaster readiness concerns. The training reflects ongoing civil-military coordination in the Home Front Command's emergency response framework.
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